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House Republicans Finalizing Proposal to Overhaul Financial Regulatory System

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    House Republicans Finalizing Proposal to Overhaul Financial Regulatory System

    June 3, 2009

    House Republicans are finalizing their plan to overhaul the financial regulatory system, which would direct failing companies into bankruptcy instead of bailouts and would strip the Federal Reserve of its oversight authority on the financial industry, according to people close to the discussions.

    These people described the plan as one that “stops rewarding failure,” ensures “taxpayers are never again asked to pick up the tab for bad bets on Wall Street” and restores “market discipline.”

    Republican members of the House Financial Services Committee are aiming to complete their proposal with House Republican leadership by Tuesday. House Democrats and the Obama Administration are writing the details of their proposals, perhaps announcing their reform bill in the next couple of weeks, according to Administration officials.

    The Republican plan offers direct opposition to the creation of a systemic risk regulator and granting the government resolution authority -- two integral components of regulatory reform backed by the White House, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, House and Senate leadership, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

    The Republican plan calls for the creation of a Consumer Protection and Market Stability Board instead of a systemic risk regulator, according to people close to the negotiations. The board would monitor the economy for regulatory gaps and report that information to Congress and existing regulatory agencies. It would have no enforcement authority.

    The House Republican proposal would also subject the Federal Reserve to audits by the Government Accountability Office, and strips it of many of its oversight and consumer protection powers and transfers them to other agencies. The plan would also combine the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Office of Thrift Supervision, according to people close to the negotiations.

    The House Republican proposal also challenges the idea of a systemic risk regulator. This plan calls for failing, systemically important companies to go through the existing bankruptcy process. The proposal would create a new chapter in the bankruptcy code to allow judges to halt claims by creditors to avoid runs on the company, according to people close to the negotiations.

    The proposal would end the conservatorships of Fannie Mae (FNM: 0.69, -0.01, -1.43%) and Freddie Mac (FRE: 0.7464, -0.0247, -3.2%) -- longstanding Republican targets -- in the next two years, and mandate they transform into fully private institutions.

    The proposal also calls for stricter oversight of credit-rating firms and stronger authority for government agencies to enforce consumer protections.

    Rich Edson, Washington Correspondent
    FOXBusiness



    This at least looks like some common sense changes, I hope it gets through Congress.
    Last edited by Flamingo; 06-04-2009, 06:15 PM. Reason: To conform with forum posting rules - OP please take note as to layout; thank you!
    May 31st, 2007: Petition Filed by my lawyer
    July 2nd, 2007: 341 Meeting Held
    September 4th, 2007: Discharged and Closed.

    #2
    So now that republicans are out of power, they want to act like it's time to change the system that they created?
    I do not provide legal advice. All I do here is give my two cents as an opinion and at least share some of the facts that I know. Attorneys can provide legal advice, so go ask them or hire one.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by CH33 Paralegal View Post
      So now that republicans are out of power, they want to act like it's time to change the system that they created?
      House Republicans are finalizing their plan to overhaul the financial regulatory system, which would direct failing companies into bankruptcy instead of bailouts and would strip the Federal Reserve of its oversight authority on the financial industry, according to people close to the discussions.

      I don't give a Rat's Arse if they are Republicans or Democrats. I'm tired of my taxes going towards Bailouts. I agree - let those companies file Bankruptcies. Those of us who have no choice, but to file bankruptcy, didn't receive any bailouts.

      O Wait, I got $250 because I receive SSD, might you possibly think that is a bailout. That pays 1/2 of a month of prescriptions for DH & I. Yes, we both have medical insurance. Yes, I've cut our prescriptions to the bare minimum. One prescription 'Lyrica' costs me $38 a month. I make it last for 2 1/2 mths. I have my 5 yr. CE (layman's term..5 yr. renewal) this Oct. for SSD. Stretching this RX might possibly harm my case. DH has 3 Rx's that cost $50 a mth. He is a Cardiac Patient (5bypass surgery 2/07 & pacemaker implant 6/07) & only has 1 kidney. He is an OTR Truck Driver.

      I know you are going to question the 'no choice, but to file bankruptcy'. In mine and DH's medical maladies which are ongoing, We have no Choice.

      Luci

      Comment


        #4
        Yeah I agree with Luci, personally I'm tired of the R and D, but if they are willing to end the bailouts I'm all for it, I"m tired of subsidizing the wages of people that make ten times the amount I do.
        May 31st, 2007: Petition Filed by my lawyer
        July 2nd, 2007: 341 Meeting Held
        September 4th, 2007: Discharged and Closed.

        Comment


          #5
          yes, by no means am I a democrat....I'm a centralist and I hate how our political policies become boolean ultimately. It sucks.
          I do not provide legal advice. All I do here is give my two cents as an opinion and at least share some of the facts that I know. Attorneys can provide legal advice, so go ask them or hire one.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by CH33 Paralegal View Post
            So now that republicans are out of power, they want to act like it's time to change the system that they created?

            I don't agree that they were the only ones that "created the system", but yes they only do the right thing when they have no power. Shame.


            After reading the proposal I doubt it will pass only because it seems to make perfect sense.


            At this point I would take back ALL bailout money, liquidate the business in cases like AIG since all the money is gone and let every bailed out company FAIL. Not letting the failures fail is what's keeping the economy stagnant.
            The essence of freedom is the proper limitation of Government

            Comment


              #7
              I agree Banca

              In fact in accordance with President Obama's PAYGO initiative I wrote my senators and representatives to rollback the TARP, Stimulus and abandon the national health care because we can't afford it. They were touting it as how Clinton got a surplus in the 90s, he only got that surplus by further robbing Social Security funds.
              May 31st, 2007: Petition Filed by my lawyer
              July 2nd, 2007: 341 Meeting Held
              September 4th, 2007: Discharged and Closed.

              Comment


                #8
                Both parties are responsible for the cluster muck we are now going through. If I had my druthers, I would throw them all out and put in a whole new bunch with term limits. Oh well, since that won't happen....All I know is we are going in the wrong direction.
                Filed BK Chapter 7 - 11/12/10 341 Meeting - 01/07/11
                Notice of no distribution - 01/12/11
                DISCHARGED - 03/09/2011

                Comment

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